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Alonzo J. Tullock Louisiana History Collection

 Collection
Identifier: A3146

Scope and Contents

The collection contains eleven letters written by Baron de Carondelet dating from 1794 to 1797 along with correspondence, newspaper clippings, and articles concerning Alonzo J. Tullock’s Louisiana history collection dating from 1895 to 2009. The collection is divided into two series: the Carondelet Series and the Tullock Series. The Carondelet Series is arranged chronologically; the Tullock Series is arranged alphabetically by type of document. Date gaps in the collection are as follows: 1795, 1798-1894, 1898-1900, 1902, 1904-1954, 1956-1973, 1975-2002, 2004-2006, and 2010-2021.

The Carondelet Series contains eleven original letters written by Baron de Carondelet when he served as governor of Louisiana in New Orleans dating 1794, and 1796 to 1797. Ten of the letters are in French addressed to “Monsieur Delassus” and one letter is a file copy of a letter in Spanish written to Don Pedro Marigny. Translations for the Carondelet-Delassus letters vary, numbering from one to three, none of which are identical. There is no translation for the Carondelet-Marigny letter. Due to the sensitive nature of the letters’ contents and to the presence of fold lines, it is assumed that they were transported in envelopes or some enclosure to maintain confidentiality. However, no envelopes accompany the letters. The greeting of each letter does not identify the recipient by name; the recipients’ names appear at the bottom left corner of the letters’ last page, near Carondelet’s closing signature. The letters also do not include the locations to which they were sent. The locations of the recipients noted on the following inventory are presumed from the appointed position each held and/or the location of their residences at the time the letters were written.

The May 1794 letter addressed to “Monsieur Delassus” is most likely written to Pierre Dehault Delassus, the father of Charles Dehault Delassus. Carondelet mentions the elder Delassus in several of his subsequent letters to Charles. The letter mentions the settlers who moved from Gallipolis, Ohio; crop failures at New Bourbon, which is where Pierre Delassus brought his family upon leaving Ohio; and discusses an expiring contract. Charles Dehault Delassus did not arrive in North America until 1794, therefore, it is likely this letter is written to his father, Pierre. In this letter Carondelet also mentions administrative issues in the Spanish colony, particularly the new Intendant, Francisco de Rendon, whom he believes has a secret mission to be carried out with Kentucky.

Most of the letters were written to Charles Dehault Delassus while he was post commander at New Madrid and date from 1796 to 1797. Carondelet wrote on a variety of many administrative and military topics, mentioning several people known to both men. He shared news of events in the colony and in Spain, sent instructions relating to settlements affected by the new Pinckney Treaty, and provided military orders in case of attack by English or American forces. Carondelet alerted Delassus to possible espionage rumors relating to Auguste de la Chaise, a Jacobin, and to the arrest and release of General George Collot for reconnoitering in Spanish territory without permission. He also instructed Delassus to check credentials of Frenchmen traveling in Louisiana. Carondelet sent guidelines for trade, for example ordering Delassus not to allow the native population to trade with the Americans, and discussed rebuilding the fort at New Madrid after a flood.

The Tullock Series contains articles and newspaper clippings about the Louisiana Purchase and correspondence about the Tullock collection dating from 1895 to 2009. After Tullock’s death in 1904, family members maintained the collection, replied to inquiries about the collection, and saved articles about colonial Louisiana and the Louisiana Purchase.

New Orleans antiquities dealer, Armand Hawkins, wrote to Tullock about documents relating to colonial Louisiana. In these letters, Hawkins explained how he acquired the documents that eventually comprised part of Tullock’s collection, including the Carondelet letters which were in a sealed box from the Delassus family. In his 8 February 1896 letter, Hawkins enclosed a translation of an official order of Gov. Laussat to Liet. Gov. Delassus dated 12 January 1804, instructing Delassus to relinquish Upper Louisiana to the United States (f.7).* He also explained that some of the letters written by Baron de Carondelet were addressed to Pierre Dehault Delassus. Hawkins’ letters dated 2 February 1896 and 8 September 1901 provide details regarding the provenance of the Delassus letters.

* [Gov. John P. Altgeld purchased the original document and placed it with the State Historical Society of Illinois (see Tullock 20 Oct 1901, f.8); it is currently part of the Records of the Transfer of Upper Louisiana to the United States, 1803, 1804, 1879, Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library, formerly known as the Illinois State Historical Library].

There is also correspondence with Walter B. Stevens, secretary of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Company, who wrote newspaper articles based on letters borrowed from Tullock’s collection (f.5), had facsimiles produced for the 1904 World’s Fair (f.10), and mentions translations. Most likely, Stevens produced one of the three translations available for most of the Carondelet letters (f.2-3). On 2 September 1901, Tullock included a four-page list of books in his collection relating to colonial Louisiana.

Several of the articles were published in The National Magazine in 1903, highlighting the 1904 World’s Fair, which celebrated the centennial of the Louisiana Purchase. There is an address by St. Louis attorney James O. Broadhead, The Louisiana Purchase: Extent of Territory Acquired by the Purchase, that he sent to Tullock in 1897. There are also two newspaper articles dated 2003 and 2009.

The final items in the series relate to A. J. Tullock’s father, George Tullock. George wrote two items: a travel diary during his journey from Scotland to Illinois in 1839 and an autobiography in 1890. Both items appear in the collection as typescripts, not originals. The existence and/or location of the original works are unknown. The autobiography includes a brief 1892 addendum. One page of notes includes vital information for George Tullock, his wife Mary Ann Milne, and their six children who lived to adulthood. The travel diary dates from June 10 to September 7, 1839. The final page includes Tullock’s accounts with Daniel Dow of Rockford, Illinois in 1841 and 1842. George Tullock and his 230 pounds of luggage set out from Craig to Glasgow, where he boarded the Horace which sailed for New York on the evening of June 20th and arrived in New York harbor on August 21, 1839. Tullock noted the weather, the names of ships seen along the voyage, and fellow travelers such as James Allen Sr. and Alex Watt. Tullock swiftly continued his journey from New York to Chicago. George Tullock’s 75-page autobiography begins with a brief history of Scotland and background on his mother and father and ends on his farm in Illinois around 1862. He wrote the addendum about two years after his wife’s death. George explained the influence that religious teachings in Scotland had on his childhood and as a young adult. He also explained his rationale for leaving Scotland and his journey (p.56), his years in Chicago (p.60), and his arrival in Rockford, Illinois (p.64). In 1844, after spending many years as a shoemaker, Tullock acquired land for farming and married. George expanded upon the economics of farming in northern Illinois and revealed that he and his wife lost three sons before they reached adulthood.

Dates

  • 1794-2022

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

The collection is open for research use.

Conditions Governing Use

For permission to publish, quote from, or reproduce material in this collection, please contact the Archives Reference Desk at archives@mohistory.org. Copyright restrictions may apply. The researcher assumes full responsibility for conforming to the laws of copyright.

Biographical Sketches

Alonzo J. Tullock (1854-1904) was a civil engineer based in Leavenworth, Kansas, who specialized in bridge and pier building in the 19th century. He is responsible for many river railway bridges in Missouri and for the major wharf constructed at Tampico, Mexico. Mr. Tullock was interested in the Louisiana Purchase and spent many years amassing a collection of books and manuscripts relating to the topic. He acquired many of the manuscripts from Armand Hawkins, a dealer in New Orleans, from approximately 1895 to 1901. Mr. Hawkins obtained many manuscripts from the grandson and great-grandson of Charles Auguste DeHault Delassus (1767-1842), Charles Auguste Dehault Delassus (1833-1898) and Emile Jules Joseph Dehault Delassus (1869-1922), respectively. For years the family kept a locked box on which a card was affixed that read, “Official letters of His Majesty, Charles III, Keep Safe for One Hundred Years - Signed Charles Dehault Delassus.” Hawkins also mentioned other items that the family owned from both Delassus and from Jean Baptiste Plauche (1785-1860), maternal grandfather of Charles’s wife, Marie Emilie Forstall Delassus (1836-1908).

In 1901, Walter B. Stevens, secretary of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Company in St. Louis, corresponded with Tullock about his collection. Stevens published articles about the letters between William Henry Harrison and Charles Dehault Delassus from Tullock’s collection in the St. Louis Globe-Democrat. He also cited some of the Harrison-Delassus letters at length in his book, St. Louis, The Fourth City, 1764-1909. A February 1903 letter from Stevens to Tullock reveals that Stevens translated some of the Carondelet letters. In 2019, Christie’s Inc. sold Tullock’s collection, which had remained in the Tullock family for over a century. The Carondelet letters in this collection are a portion of Tullock’s original collection.

Most letters purchased by Tullock were the possessions of Charles Auguste Dehault Delassus (1767-1842), best known as the last lieutenant governor of Upper Louisiana from 1799 to 1804. He was the second son of Pierre and Josepha Delassus, born in Bouchaine in April 1764. In 1782, Charles became a military cadet in the service of Carlos III, King of Spain, and as a reward for leading a company of soldiers during the siege at Fort St. Elmo in the Pyrenees, was promoted to lieutenant colonel. He was stationed in Madrid and served in the King’s Body Guard. Charles requested a transfer to the Louisiana Regiment, which was granted by the King of Spain, to be closer to his family who fled France to escape the French Revolution in 1790. Upon his arrival in New Orleans in 1794, the Baron de Carondelet appointed Charles civil and military commander of the post of New Madrid (Missouri), which he held until his appointment as lieutenant governor in 1799.

Francisco Luis Héctor, Barón de Carondelet (1747-1807), served as governor of the Spanish colonies of Louisiana and West Florida between 1791 and 1797, perhaps the most turbulent years of the Spanish colonial era. While in office, Carondelet faced expansionist pressures from the United States, internal dissension inspired by the French Revolution (1789–1799), and threatened attacks from the French (1793–1794) and the British (1796–1797). Carondelet was born in Cambrai, France, the son of Jean Louis Carondelet and Marie Angélique Bernard de Rasoir. He entered Spanish military service in 1762. In October 1777, he married María de la Concepción Castaños y Aragorri, a native of La Coruña, in Madrid. After serving in the Caribbean during the American Revolution (1775–1783), Carondelet participated in the Spanish siege of Pensacola in 1781. Eight years later, he became governor of San Salvador in Guatamala. On 13 March 1791, he was appointed governor of Spanish Louisiana and West Florida. Carondolet was reassigned to the Viceroyalty of New Granada in northern South America, where he eventually became president of the Audiencia of Quito, an administrative branch of the Spanish government located near present-day Ecuador. He died there on 10 December 1807.

Extent

0.25 Cubic Feet ( (1 box))

Language of Materials

French

Spanish; Castilian

English

Arrangement

The collection is divided into two series: the Carondelet Series and the Tullock Series. The Carondelet Series is arranged chronologically; the Tullock Series is arranged alphabetically by type of document

Physical and Technical Requirements

There are no physical or technical restrictions.

Donor Information

The collection was donated by the following descendants of Alonzo J. Tullock in 2020 (accession number 2020-118): Christina Hart Howlett, Louise Bennet, Barbara Hadley, Stuart A. Naquin, Susan Naquin, Carole Naquin, and David D. Naquin.

Related Materials

Archival collections at the Missouri Historical Society related to Baron de Carondelet include: Baron de Carondelet Papers (A0231), Clamorgan Family Papers (A0288), Delassus-St. Vrain Family Papers (A0373), and the Thomas Jefferson Collection (A0770).

Sources Consulted During Processing

Kenny, Laurence T., Jan. 1919, The Gallipolis Colony, The Catholic Historical Review, Vol.4, No.4, pp.415-451.

Gayarre, Charles. (1885). History of Louisiana: The Spanish Domination, 3rd ed., Vol. III, New Orleans: Armand Hawkins.


Processing Information

Processed with funding from The Stuart Foundation, Inc. by Kristina Perez, 2021; updated 2023.

Title
Alonzo J. Tullock Louisiana History Collection
Status
Completed
Author
EAD by Kristina Perez using ArchivesSpace
Date
2021
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
English

Repository Details

Part of the Missouri Historical Society Library and Research Center Repository

Contact:
225 S. Skinker Blvd.
St. Louis MO 63105 United States
314-746-4510